Browse Clearinghouse Review articles by category
- Attorneys & Legal Services
- Bankruptcy
- Civil Procedure & Administrative Law
- Civil Rights
- Communications & Marketing
- Consumer
- Criminal
- Disability
- Economic Development
- Education
- Elections
- Employment
- Environmental Justice
- Family Law
- Food Programs
- Fundraising & Development
- Government and Governmental Services
- Guardianship & Conservatorship
- Health
- Housing
- Immigration
- Juveniles
- Leadership
- Legal Research
- License (Auto & Others)
- Mental Health
- Migrants
- Native Americans
- Prisons
- Public Utilities & Energy
- Rural Issues
- Senior Citizens
- Social Security & SSI
- Taxation
- Technology
- Training
- Unemployment Compensation & Unemployment Insurance
- Veterans & Military
- Welfare
- Wills & Estates
- Workforce Development
Assessing the Ad Hoc Nature of Financial Obligations Arising in the Illinois Criminal Justice System
Involvement in the criminal justice system today often results in not only punishment for a particular offense but also the imposition of an array of financial fines, fees, and penalties that increasingly bear little rational relationship to the offense itself. These financial obligations do, however, directly affect how former offenders leaving the corrections system can successfully reintegrate into society since the financial burdens weigh most heavily on low-income defendants. As cash-strapped legislatures may be tempted to increase revenues by increasing these financial obligations, advocates should know how to oppose those fiscal policies that punish offenders long after they have served their time.
Copies of this article are available for purchase online for $15 apiece.
Related Articles
- Sharon M. Dietrich, When "Your Permanent Record" Is a Permanent Barrier: Helping Legal Aid Clients (July-Aug. 2007)
- Amy E. Hirsch, Civil Consequences of Women's Criminal Records: Strategies for Advocates (July-Aug. 2007)
- Cynthia Works, Reentry—the Tie That Binds Civil Legal Aid Attorneys and Public Defenders (Sept.-Oct. 2003)
